Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, FEB. 13, 1928. e F e][mr' uarys _Fimal Reductions NOW COMES THE GREATEST VALUES OF THE WINTER SEASON IN THIS ANNUAL EVENT. CLEARA! NCE PRICES REACH TO EVERY CORNER OF THE. STORE, MAKING IT POSSIBLE FOR PURCHASERS TO SAVE A GREAT DEAL ON ALL NEEDED ITEMS. THE REDUCTIONS MADE ONLY FOR OUR FEBRUARY CLEARANCE SALE REPRE- SENT SAVI! REALIZES THE WHICH COMMAND THE ATTENNTION OF EVERY MAN AND WOMAN WHO GREAT ECONOMIES THEY REPRESENT. A Shirt Event tér ‘Men SCORES OF STYLES AND !"?ACTICALLY ALL SIZES MAKE THIS CLEARANCE SALE OF SHIRTS ONE OF THI UP ALL SHIRTS Al U WOMEN AND GIRLS’ LEGGINGS Mostly All Sizes Special—$1.00 Pair [13YS’ BIB OVER! Geod quality for school wear Special at $1.00 DOUBLE TRE JUR COMPACTS Regular $1.50 for $1.00 "Lanvin PROPOSES #RS HUNTLEY N SPAULOING CONCORD i her home 1 . 185 intarest of ity N. Spauld- ing, wif governor of Nebw | Hampshirc Mrs. § plished support of the oW Federation of M But other activities her interest and ¢ Governor Spaulding has tation for many and extens philanthropies to which Mrs.} Spaulding has given her sapport,! Her interest in political affair and in her husband’s public ¢ reer, while unobtrusive, appear, | none the less keen. On the occa-| sion of every important debate! during the legislative sessions,' Mrs. Spaulding has slipped quiei iy into a seat in the public gal- lery from which she followed; ” closely the proceedings. Mrs. Spaulding came from St.! Paul, Minnesota, to adopt New | Hampshire as her home, on the occasion of her marriage in 1901 ——————— POCKETS SUPPLIED ON NEW EVENING GOWNS PARIS—A dressmaker who con- tributes much toward making of th Hampshire | M MOS (b PER CEN F THE SEASON { ATTRACTIVE SALES OF THE SEASQN-=~—COME IN AND STOCK T REDUCTION. SPECIAL DOLLAR DAY VALUES CONTINUES ALL! THIS|WE JERSEY BUCKLE ALLS after Pair REGU‘I.AR Good: for ' cold wmlm and and real warm Special—$1. 00 M * REGUEAR 35¢ PERCALES and, GIN fon thls We'l!h 25 cents yard ARCTICS Wi '8 ¥ “’”“"‘*:d ’, f : CHILDREN'S W YOOL MIXED HEAVY i 50X Fot pacs and boots—a real bargam Pait for $1.00 !i‘s" Lait 65¢ ' WHITE TURKISH TOWE W,M ; L2240y smml_z for it 00 | LADIES’ KNIT COTTON BLOOMERS Pink and White Sizes 5 to 9 Sbecill—i 1.00 Behrends fl(3(1»., Inc. Juneau’s Lendmg ‘WOMAN KEEPS RECORDS | | FOR GOAT RANCHES | ROCK SPRINGS, Texas, | | Fob. 13—Miss Claudine Bour- | land compiles the family his- goats, and treasurer n Angora Goat Association, she the records of pedigre woolly aristo association con anchmen. i Miss Bourland, who is less | than 30 years old, sells tho mohair clipp~d from tho s on the ranch for the mom- bers of the association pool this by-product of thefr indus- try. She handles thodsands of doliars e ar, distri- | buting proceeds of the mohalr | | sdles among the memb rs der puft and a flapper ration of Y DRESSES The rearcst th costa that ha PARLS *| scores: taincd v dgawing rooms uns Lanvina model of bla ich has sleeves slashed ed like a jockey's blouse. is collarless and the are trimmed with in calls her creation and s {LOWLY DOUGHNUT NOW FASHIONABLE PALM BEACH, Fla.—The lowly | doughnut has come into its own in fashionable Palm Beach soclety and i3 enjoying a great populari- Hostegses ar> including the doughnut in afterncon tea menus A good gize, which means past the dainty measurement, dropped in Rhot fat, coc 1o honey beige I then prinkled zonarous v the devghhut i3 es- pecially DI r with men guests Explanation of the doughnut suc cess among the wealthy is found in the fact one gets weary of the complicated dishes continually sarved. Another favorite dish 's offered at chrrent country break { fast parties—fried apples with | sausage. | GAMBLING INSPIRES Paris fashions is putting visible kets on her newest evening most feminine frocks of ' and Iace have pockets big 10 contain a lipstick, pow- .'M_ NEW NOVELTIES PARIS—Small gambling as an indoor sport has inspired a new fashion of cigarette cases, Mght ers and other personal paraphe- jmalia decorated with gambling 5| or Department Stere A fasRiGHable’ smokefs’ shop in the Rué de Ia Paix showa costly clgarette cduéd with gatbl- ing scotes worked oft im enariel and fewels. succss‘fs mcw 8H‘0€! PARIS—AR impoftant bootmk- er_in the K> de la Paix shows a high Taced shoe among his new models for spring. It is a light beige suede shoe of formal type with a high heel. It laces well above the anklcs but does not reach as far as the calf of th2 leg. e LADY MACLEAY PLAYS TENNIS WORLD OVER LONDON--Lady Evelyn Mae- leay, w of 3ir Ronald Maclcay wh 3 leaving sho for Pragie to brzome Biitlsh ninliler @ CzechoSlovak a, i3 an. cnthu-oa tic te player ond has main- * intc.vst in the game at 1S pudts in all parts of 10 Which she has a har husband. many gears she lived Shina where her husband. was conna:llor of lagation ana nistery, Ledy Macléay has e collection o: Chl and ntal treadures whici she will take with hobito besutity the okt Bohemian mg which . serves Great Britain’ as afegation build: ing in Sir - Ronald has also servéd . his govertiment at Wnshl&:‘fffi peétikagen, Brus. sela; 1d, ico City, Bn’ifil Affes lnd Pe- king. wl WOMAN ll O e, . “of No ui‘x’f?"‘ uoh & wirioh 1§ considered 1$u a woman. into" the & “broke per game as a has worked b Wnshlnsion, Fugie, a arrived in after a seven ot, is warm in anmfl(y wnmmws, Mex: | § ionor forf . Richiond _aul|ep ot MRS SN A traveled at the rate of 20'milen: a @ay for months, quite unmolested. She made many sketches and drawings, despite prejudices of Tibetans against plctures. She ;flm persuaded. a nun to sit for or. Pragress Is Noted Amotig Indian Woen LONDON — Women fn India {have made marvelous strides in the last few years, Sir Atul Chat- | térjee, high commissioner for In- dia in the United Kingdom, told tan educational association here. “The women of India today ex- arche a far greater influence in thy home than in any country wh.h which 1 am acquainted,” Sir Atul asserted, “and their influ- ence in affairs outside the home, although not so obtrusive, is still exttemely powerful. “A politiclan, an administrator or a professional man, if he.neg- lects the influence of Indian wo- men, cannot be but a complete faihire in his ' profession, and it dll the more important that at- tention should be given to the education. of women, because at this moment India is passing through vety important Te- maikdble changes. "W‘ are trying to do in n tew Il that has been done in wéptern. Burope in two or three i 'e are passing from al state to the phase civilization.” pointed out ;Iast saven years near- tures in, India t women should women had been elect- legislative council. e wlum IN PORT o-yt. F. P. Olden ‘uhnbuu and its oth- , Lee Fulk, aboard, ar- terday. She s & m ing boat and, op witht the Peril Straits of M w coat. The shoulders are clo: the The same strip of color extends down the skirt front brown is repeated in a band jacket and skirt. ODES 4 oMeNT ./ hen the jacket, which ends at the belt, is worn, this putty gray moro- cain dress has the ap- pearance of a raglan cut like those of a rain- coat. is open, however, to dis- The jacket front se the brown front of dress underneath. and the line of at the back on WRITER SEES COLLEG NEW YOURK, Feb. 13—Philip Guedalla, English writer, covered that in America “the or- dinary man is not the ordinary man at all—but the ordinary wo- man.” The lecturer’s audiences are largely women, Guedalla found in his American travels, and he sug gests in his newly “Conquistador” that perhaps one factor in explanation of this is “the wide diffusion of unive; education in the United States arousing a thirst for knowledg not easily ‘appeased. He observes that “the men vro- ceed into their various callings and any appetite for information rapidly submergeg in the new ar- dours of their necessary occupa- “But the continues. college women?” he “Their fate is very different. For a year or s¢ longer, perhaps—they live at; home unmarried. During this in- terval a lecture may reasonably appeal as a pleasant m2ans of passing time away. There is still 1 vague desire to learn; the lec- ture may lead somewhere new. or may continue something half- learnt in college. That feeling, I think, accounts for the presence of one’'s younger hearers. “Then comes marriage; homa performs for women same absorbing functions as a man’s profession. That is why men and young married women | are so largely absent from the lecture hall. But families, as time goes on, grow up; the home ceases to be an all-absorbing oc- cupation; and the woman is left with leisure on her hands. That is the second stage at which the announcement of a lecture draws and the the | IN WOMEN’ has dis.| published | that college may have stirred is; tions.” | GE INFLUENCE Ifaint memory fof 18dsdds/ hait learnt, ten, fifteen; or - twenty| |vears hefore. §o ghe,goes, ‘m‘ |llke her husband,. to the Jlecture, ] la willing vietim of the, lectyro hablf® " o it fo Aimee McPhetson, Los Angeles| evangelist, and Willlam Hale} Thompeon, ayor. of; Chicago, .are among the personages from whom, Guzdalla gathered . his vcopcept,i‘oi |of America, as alsa are, less, prom- inent figures such. as a justicel of the peace who resorted,. of poetry to thank the, city commis- sioners for an increase in salary nounced a leum, “Taj Mahal’ mauso: First Woman Speaks At .M.Afl“‘“ CULVER, Ind-—4& grecedent; a3 old as Culver Military Academy itself was broken when Mrs, Irene McIntyre Walbridge of Peters-| morough, N. H., .national ;pres:- dent of the American Legion aux- iliary, addressed the students ofj the school for boys. She was the first woman ever to receive such an invitation.] The occasion was the annual] memorial service for more than three-score Culver men who were killed in the World war, Mrs. Walbridge was a Salvation Army worker in the war and was under fire 256 days. She was gassed twice and received two citations for bravery. - e+ DADDY LONG-LEGS Parish HaW, Feb. 16 - .+ —— Let us take care of your ban- adv. her. It seems to beckon with a| quet or cake baking, Mrs. Sully.| —adv. | DAANGE ~ PEKDE | SER OF For 300 yaan, m lu‘- come to America wlth fi-fl ltr fragrant freshne: now you cdfi ‘taste it as M as it le!t the 198t hfw Oflontd u- Y ._:' S “LECTURE HABIT") and an advertising man who an-}| BIRD CAGES BRAqs AND WHITE ENAMEL CANARY CAGES In both round and squate styles See Solid Brass Round Cage. Stantls JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO. Hardware and Undertaking Phone 12 Sunny Suds Washer iadede “$150.00 \44( § USE IT FREE FOR ONE WASH DAY TRY IT oUT * ' i THEN JUDGE FOR YOURSELF e Stinny-Suds or the old style Pip Killer Wash Board A Clothés Dryer FREE with each "“Washer“Value $16.50 i H (44 & Alaska Electric Light ‘1'“& Po'wer Co. Phone 6 Juneau, Alaska s:,..,,.y J ust Unpacked In prints, daintily ‘trimimed in ‘contrasting colors, Kixgona and setin sleeves ‘Sizes 16 to 44 Special $1.50 e — In Dzmety and Engllsh - Pring trimmed in organdie #nd lace—featurin the new flare skirt and fitted waist, also straight lines.